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AFCON

AFCON: Super Eagles on consolidation flight… set to make Sudan the next victim

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BY ADEMOLA OLAJIRE

It is less than 48 hours after their memorable defeat of the Pharaohs of Egypt in the opening match of Group D of the 33rd Africa Cup of Nations in Cameroon and the Super Eagles have shifted their focus completely to Saturday’s confrontation with the Falcons of Jediane (Sudan) at the Stade Roumdé Adjia in Garoua.

Just as happened in their debut at the 59 years ago, Nigeria had Egypt and Sudan lined up as their first two opponents of the competition. In 1963, the Egyptians hammered the Cinderellas 6-3, and Sudan followed with a 4-0 whiplash of the newcomers.

Tuesday’s 1-0 success was Nigeria’s first-ever win over Egypt in a first match at the AFCON. Twelve years ago, in the Angolan city of Benguela, the Pharaohs came from deficit as a result of Chinedu Obasi’s early goal to lash the Eagles 3-1.

Apart from their 4-0 win over the Eagles in 1963 in Accra, the Falcons’ 1-0 defeat of Nigeria in an AFCON qualifier in Khartoum in October 2014 was one of the principal reasons for the absence of the green-and-white in the 30th finals in Equatorial Guinea seven years ago.

So much has changed in 59 years and the Eagles are quietly confident of victory over the Sudanese when both teams tango at the 30,000 –capacity venue in northern Cameroon on Saturday evening.

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“I am happy with our output against Egypt and especially the way the boys set up and approached the game the way we agreed was best. Everything worked. But we have shifted our focus completely to the next match and it is another day and another team and a different approach. I am happy with the playing personnel that we have got and the way they are ready to give their all,” Coach Eguavoen told thenffnews on Thursday morning.

Former Eagles’ captain Eguavoen featured for the Nigeria senior team for 11 years, between 1987 and 1998, during which he lifted the Africa Cup of Nations in 1994, held aloft the Afro-Asian Cup the following year, played in three AFCON finals (it could have been six but he missed the 1990 finals in Algeria; Nigeria withdrew from the 1996 finals and; was barred from the 1998 competition) and featured at the 1994 and 1998 FIFA World Cup finals. He won a total of 51 senior caps.

As coach, Eguavoen was assistant to another former captain Christian Chukwu when Nigeria finished third at the 2004 finals in Tunisia, then led the team to win another bronze in Egypt two years later. He is one of only 15 indigenous coaches to have taken charge of the Senior Men National Team of Nigeria, and also one of the 15 African coaches at these finals in Cameroon.

As Head Coach, the hard-as-nails defender has the most win-record with the Super Eagles, winning nine of his 12 matches in charge between 2005 and 2007, and is one of only three coaches to have steered an African country to the top 10 of the FIFA rankings (the other two being Clemens Westerhof and Egypt’s Hassan Shehata).

On Thursday, Eguavoen waved aside the record of his being the only Nigeria coach to have led the Super Eagles to win all three group phase matches at the AFCON, when his wards steamrolled Ghana, Zimbabwe and Senegal in Egypt 16 years ago.

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“I am focused on winning against Sudan for now; I don’t want to think about any record or how we go about our third match. Sudan is in focus now and we have to deal with that, squarely.”

Three points on Saturday will guarantee group leaders Nigeria a place in the Round of 16 of the 33rd AFCON, meaning a more relaxed approach to their final group phase clash with debutants Guinea Bissau also in Garoua on Wednesday next week. If they finish top of Group D, the three-time champions will remain in Garoua for their Round of 16 task.

Old hands in the Nigeria team’s backroom have told of a breath of fresh air in camp, in which democracy, liberty and communication have been instituted and everyone is made to feel a part of all activities, events and programmes. “Coach Eguavoen has insisted that everyone must communicate; they must say their mind at all times. He speaks to each and every player like he’s their uncle and notes and deals with their challenges. He does not discriminate.

“The camp is so interesting and is once more like a family setting. Everyone is like another’s brother. The spirit is high and I believe our team will go far in this competition,” said one backroom staff.   

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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AFCON

Broos Questions CAF Consistency as AFCON Title Row Deepens

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South Africa’s Coach, Hugo Broos Dissects Super Eagles; Says Team Getting Better With Every Match -

South Africa head coach Hugo Broos has delivered a strong critique of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) following its controversial decision to strip Senegal of the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) title and award it to Morocco.

The ruling, delivered two months after Senegal’s 1-0 extra-time victory in Rabat, has sparked widespread backlash across the continent, with Senegal already preparing an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Reacting to the decision, Broos questioned CAF’s consistency and timing, describing the situation as unfair to Senegal.

“What I can say is CAF have shown again there is no consistency in decisions,” he said.

“It is painful for Senegal to lose the trophy. There is a rule that if you leave the pitch, you forfeit the game, and it’s done. But why don’t you [CAF] do it earlier, instead of waiting for two months?”

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Broos stressed that while the rules may justify sanctions, the delayed enforcement undermines credibility.

“Sometimes, you don’t even have to wait for a complaint… the rules are there,” he added, suggesting CAF should have acted immediately after the incident rather than revisiting the outcome long after the final whistle.

He also pointed to broader inconsistencies in football governance, citing a separate case involving South Africa during the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, where sanctions were applied months after the fact despite procedural timelines requiring prompt complaints.

“I have said it before that you must be consistent with decisions. It’s painful for Senegal, and they could have done it much earlier,” Broos said.

The controversy stems from Senegal’s brief walk-off during the final in protest over a penalty decision. Although the team returned to complete the match and secured victory, CAF’s Appeals Board later ruled that the action constituted a forfeiture, awarding Morocco a 3-0 win.

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Meanwhile, respected journalist Osasu Obayiuwana has intensified scrutiny on the officiating of the match, alleging that Olivier Safari Kabene may have improperly influenced referee Jean-Jacques Ngambo Ndala during the game.

He questioned why no disciplinary action has been taken and why both officials remain in their positions, further fuelling concerns about governance within CAF.

CAF president Patrice Motsepe has defended the independence of the Appeals Board, even as criticism mounts over what many observers describe as an unprecedented decision in African football.

With Senegal set to challenge the ruling legally and voices like Broos calling for consistency and transparency, the AFCON title saga continues to cast a shadow over the credibility of African football administration.

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AFCON 2025 Final Controversy: Legal Reality Favours Morocco as Senegal Eyes CAS Appeal

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The fallout from the controversial 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) final between Morocco and Senegal has taken a decisive legal turn, with sports law experts insisting that the Confederation of African Football (CAF) acted within established regulations in awarding Morocco a 3–0 default victory.

The decision followed Senegal’s temporary withdrawal from the pitch in protest against a Video Assistant Referee (VAR) ruling—an action CAF deemed a breach of competition rules.

Clear Rule, Predictable Outcome

According to media and sports lawyer Patrick Rode, the case represents a “textbook application” of football regulations rather than an arbitrary administrative decision.

Under CAF competition rules, specifically Articles 82 and 84, any team that refuses to continue play or leaves the field without the referee’s consent is automatically considered to have forfeited the match.

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In such cases, the standard sanction is unequivocal:  3–0 default loss.

This principle aligns with broader FIFA disciplinary frameworks, where “refusal to play” triggers automatic consequences, leaving little room for interpretation.

Why CAF’s Decision Stands Firm

From a strictly legal standpoint, the ruling appears difficult to overturn for three key reasons:

  • Clear Violation: Senegal’s act of leaving the pitch constitutes an undisputed breach of the rules.
  • Mandatory Sanction: The 3–0 forfeiture is not discretionary but explicitly prescribed.
  • No Legal Ambiguity: The regulations leave no grey areas for subjective interpretation.

As Rode succinctly puts it, “emotion does not equal law.”

Even if Senegal had been leading or had already celebrated victory, such contextual factors hold no weight once a fundamental rule breach is established.

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CAS Appeal: Slim Chances, Strategic Arguments

Senegal’s Football Federation is expected to challenge the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), the highest authority in global sports dispute resolution.

However, CAS typically intervenes only under limited conditions, including:

  • * Procedural irregularities
  • * Arbitrary decision-making
  • *Disproportionate sanctions

None of these thresholds appears immediately evident in this case.

That said, Senegal’s legal team may attempt to build arguments around:

  • Match Continuity: If play resumed after the protest, does a full forfeiture remain proportionate?
  • Officiating Responsibility: Could confusion involving the referee and VAR mitigate Senegal’s culpability?

These points could form the crux of the appeal, though they face an uphill legal battle.

Sport vs Law: An Inevitable Clash

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The controversy highlights a recurring tension in modern football—where emotional, on-field realities collide with rigid regulatory frameworks.

While fans and players may view the outcome as harsh, legal systems in sport prioritise consistency and enforceability over sentiment.

With CAS proceedings expected in the coming months, the case is set to become a landmark reference in African football governance—testing not just CAF’s authority, but the balance between justice, discipline, and the spirit of the game.

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CAF president admits African football struggling with trust issues

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Africa Cup of Nations finals draw - Theatre National Mohammed V, Rabat, Morocco - January 27, 2025 President of the Confederation of African Football Patrice Motsepe talks to media before the draw REUTERS/Abdelhak Balhaki

African football remains plagued by trust issues and questions over its integrity, ​Confederation of African Football president Patrice Motsepe said on Wednesday after Senegal was stripped of the ‌Africa Cup of Nations title.

But he defended the decision of his organisation’s Appeal Board to award the Africa Cup of Nations title to Morocco after upholding their protest over the outcome of the January 18 final.

Senegal, who won the match 1-0 in Rabat, ​walked off for 14 minutes at the end of regulation time in protest of hosts Morocco being awarded a penalty, but returned to win in extra time.

While Morocco’s initial protest had ⁠been rejected by CAF’s Disciplinary Board, the same governing body’s Appeal Board found Senegal had transgressed tournament regulations by ​staging a walkoff and handed Morocco the title.

“I previously expressed my extreme disappointment with the incidents that took place ​at the final,” Motsepe said in a video statement released on Wednesday.

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“It undermines the good work that CAF has done over many, many years to ensure that there’s integrity, there’s respect, there’s ethics, there’s governance, as well as the credibility of the results of ​our football matches.

“We are still dealing with suspicion and mistrust. It’s a legacy issue. When I became president, one ​of the major concerns was the impartiality, independence and the respect of referees and match commissioners, and a lot of good work ‌has ⁠been done,” he insisted.

RESPECT AND INTEGRITY

Motsepe highlighted that both CAF’s disciplinary and appeal boards were independent bodies composed of legal practitioners selected with the assistance of member associations.

“It is important that the decisions of our Disciplinary Board and Appeals Board are viewed with respect and integrity,” he said.

“If you look at the composition of those bodies, they ​reflect some of the most ​respected lawyers and judges ⁠on the continent.

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“But we will still have to deal with this perception and concerns about the integrity. It’s an ongoing issue.”

Motsepe, who was chosen as CAF president in 2021 ​and re-elected one year ago, said CAF was committed to fair play and denied ​there was any ⁠preferential treatment amid perceptions that Morocco have too much sway over the African game.

“I’m told that Senegal is going to appeal, which is very important. Every one of the 54 nations in Africa have a right to pursue appeals and ⁠we will ​adhere and respect the decision that’s taken at the highest level.

“A ​critical factor is that not a single country in Africa will be treated in a manner that is more preferential, or more advantageous, or ​more favourable than any other country on the African continent,” the South African billionaire mining magnate added.

-Reuters

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